Yes. She was alive for second or two prior to self inflicting the second shot.
Shelia was never on the bed. There was no blood present to show this. The RAID team notes all state Sheila was on the floor. This is corroborated by the crime scene photos and the shell casing location.
These cranky dopey theories of yours and Mikes do Jeremy no favours. They have to end.
"Yes. She was alive for second or two prior to self inflicting the second shot."It is notable that whenever this anomaly is pointed out to you, you just avoid responding.
The photographs of Sheila show that it's not only plainly obvious that she couldn't have died before 03:00 in the morning which was over seven hours before the photographs showing fresh blood were taken, but also that a time of death at the time the police broke in at about 07:30 is also ruled out according to accepted medical assumptions about the time it takes for blood trails to dry.
If Sheila had shot herself twice at 07:30 or thereabouts she would have been dead for over two hours before photographs showing blood still discharging were taken.
Professors Meloni Cavalli said that they thought Sheila could not have been dead for more than two hours when the photographs were taken. That does not mean that they thought she had been dead for two hours.
In fact it implies the view she had probably been dead for less than that time. The two hours is meant to set an upper limit to the time, not to claim it was the most probably time. You seem to think that the extreme limit set allows you to fit in a time of two hours to accommodate 07:30. It's a common mistake to confuse different kinds of question in that way.
The theory that there was only a few seconds between the two shots is contradicted by the pathologist Peter Vanezis, who said in court that he could tell from the large amount of hemorrhaging that the lower wound must have been inflicted some time earlier than the upper, because the upper wound would have been instantly fatal.
You listen to that, but still claim that there was only a few seconds between the two shots, so what's the point of arguing.
Also, when Dr Craig certified Sheila dead at 8:44, he said that he saw only one bullet wound and he said that the blood was dry. The photograph taken at around 10:00am shows two wounds and blood trails that are still wet. Craig confirmed in his later statement to COLP that he really did see only one wound at that stage.
It's notable that Craig was careful not to say that there definitely was only one wound, but expresses himself in a way that is curiously ambiguous-as if there might have been two, but he only saw one! The COLP investigators ought to have asked him to express himself more clearly. It was probably they who suggested he put it like that.
In truth, it's absurd that Craig would not have seen two bullet wounds if they had both been there, because the two trails lead the eye to them. Although what looks like a trail from the lower wound is actually a mirror stain from the upper trail, it looked at a casual glance like a trail from the lower wound.
How could Craig not have noticed the two trails, if they had both been present at that time?
Mike Tesko says he has seen a photograph of Sheila on the bed and he says that the two blood trails running to Sheila's right were not there at that stage. That makes perfect sense given that the lower trail is a mirror stain from the upper, which probably occurred when a cop moved Sheila head to the right a few seconds after the second shot. If he lifted her head, it may have caused two skin surfaces to have contact, hence the mirror stain.
There was a trail from the lower wound running down across the necklace. It is still there in the later pictures but feint, just as if somebody had tried to remove it. The upper wound was inflicted after the picture Mike saw was taken.